The Atlantic Literary Review, Volume 2,Edições 3-4Atlantic Publishers and Distributors, 2001 |
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Página 39
... tradition more coherently available to her , slave narrative . As a consequence , that tradition's stress on labor emerges in her writing . Indeed , it is this aspect of Wilson's text that most marks her separation from Western pastoral ...
... tradition more coherently available to her , slave narrative . As a consequence , that tradition's stress on labor emerges in her writing . Indeed , it is this aspect of Wilson's text that most marks her separation from Western pastoral ...
Página 138
... traditional parents " ( 3 ) , and yet very much part of a larger tradition and joint family , she thinks : " our minds are not so free of the musings that occupy so much space in the woman's brain : doing one's own things , mapping ...
... traditional parents " ( 3 ) , and yet very much part of a larger tradition and joint family , she thinks : " our minds are not so free of the musings that occupy so much space in the woman's brain : doing one's own things , mapping ...
Página 40
... tradition associated with orally transmitted knowledge which is silenced and despised by colonial education . Anansi tales are prior to the sixteenth century and have their roots in West Africa . In the Ashanti language of the region ...
... tradition associated with orally transmitted knowledge which is silenced and despised by colonial education . Anansi tales are prior to the sixteenth century and have their roots in West Africa . In the Ashanti language of the region ...
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THE ATLANTIC LITERARY REVIEW | 7 |
Viorica Patea | 15 |
R J Ellis | 38 |
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